China Daily

US may add Ant Group to trade blacklist

Beijing slams abusing concept of national security to oppress foreign companies

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

China’s Ant Group has become the latest target of the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump as it considers a potential blacklisti­ng of the Chinese fintech giant, but financial experts said the move is largely symbolic.

The US State Department has submitted a proposal to add Ant Group to the “entity list”, according to a Reuters report citing two people familiar with the matter.

The list is a trade blacklist that restricts US companies from exporting certain technologi­es and products to those individual­s or companies.

The government’s move came as the Chinese company, an affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, is preparing for a concurrent initial public offering in stock exchanges in Shanghai and Hong Kong. China hawks in the Trump administra­tion are seeking to deter US investors from taking part in the IPO.

“Any impact on Ant would probably be symbolic,” said Martin Chorzempa, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics. “I’m not aware of any major reliance ( of Ant) on US tech/ products. The IPO still goes on, it expands internatio­nally, and US controls look weak.”

His view was echoed by Abishur Prakash, a geopolitic­al specialist at the Center for Innovating the Future.

“The trade blacklist is largely symbolic. It won’t be effective in stopping Ant from either going public or investing in critical areas ( i. e. blockchain),” Prakash told the CNBC business TV network.

The entity list has been used by the Trump administra­tion to go after Chinese companies over “national security” concerns, with Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd the most prominent name on the list.

Trump has been taking a tough approach on Chinese technology companies and has often criticized China during his campaign for reelection this year.

US Senator Marco Rubio has successful­ly urged the Trump administra­tion to pursue investigat­ions of Chinese companies, called last week for the US government to consider options to delay Ant Group’s IPO.

But Chorzempa argued that the entity list’s effect on a fintech company like Ant Group is not significan­t, because the company is not reliant on US technology.

China opposes the US practice of abusing the concept of “national security” to oppress foreign companies, Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a daily news briefing on Thursday.

The US side should respect market economies and the principle of fair competitio­n, follow global economic and trade rules, and provide an open, fair and nondiscrim­inatory business environmen­t, said Zhao.

“Note the lack of real national security justificat­ion to give this action any real legitimacy,” Chorzempa said in a tweet. “Ant isn’t actively going after US users, so ‘ sensitive data’ on Americans is bogus.”

‘ Terrible idea’

Alipay, the payment app of Ant Group, is currently unavailabl­e for US users but used mainly by Chinese tourists in the United States, he said.

Calling the move “a terrible idea”, Chorzempa said: “If the bar to harsh US actions against a Chinese company is simply global success and innovation,” the US government “plays into and strengthen­s” the China hard- liner view that the US just wants to take China down.

He also noted that many people mistake the entity list for a sanction of “Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List”. The individual­s and companies on that list, called “SDNs”, have their assets blocked, and Americans are prohibited from doing business with them.

Making Ant Group an SDN would be a huge blow, cutting off global banking relations and stopping even non- US banks or investors from participat­ing in the IPO, said Chorzempa, but “the entity listing floated only cuts off US tech and products, so the IPO could still go on”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong